Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksFold/unfold allBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Radiology Resources ====== ===== General ===== * [[https://portal.e-lfh.org.uk/login|R-ITI Modules]] - created by the RCR, these modules are generally pretty good across a wide range of topics, though can be a bit slow and unexciting. * [[https://www.penracourses.org.uk/|PENRA Courses]] - you should have an account for this, Ross and a few others are trying to build a large case set covering a wide range of topics. * [[https://mrionline.com/|MRI Online]] - Lots of good videos on a range of topics. While lots of the content requires yo to pay, there are plenty of good videos that are available for free, particularly their Noon Conferences. ---- ===== Exams ===== [[https://www.radiologycafe.com/exams/|Radiology Cafe]] has a really good section on this, but some local suggestions: [[private:thiswebsite|This website is a local godsend - Ross' Question Bank]] Anatomy: * [[https://www.imaios.com/en/e-anatomy|e-Anatomy]] - the academy should provide you with an account for this, good as a resource to refer to. * Question sets - there are massive banks of example questions floating round. The [[https://www.radiologycafe.com/exams/|Radiology Cafe]] mock exams are a good place to start, but there are lots more generally a bit harder sets on the academy learnmat drive. Physics: 2A: * Radiology review - podcast by Matt Covington * [[https://www.youtube.com/@neuroradish|Neuroradish youtube channel]] ---- ===== On-Call ===== Practice is key for preparing for on-call - do the on-call case sessions, get reporting IP scans, and cover the phones with support - but to make sure you've covered a good breadth of pathology it is worth looking at a few learning resources. A few suggestions below. Books: * On Call Radiology by Gareth Lewis et al. - Covers all the common presentations with a brief summary of what to look for and how to vet - a couple of PDF copies are floating around. Worth aread prior to starting on-call. Reference Websites (no surprises here): * [[https://radiopaedia.org/?lang=gb|Radiopedia]] * [[https://app.statdx.com/|Stat Dx]] ==== Case Sets ==== There are lots of good sets of cases on PACS around the region for on-call cases, some particularly good ones include: * On-call cases (JLOOKER) - found on Plymouth PACS : a really good set of on-call cases covering more or less all the common serious presentations. * Acute Abdominal Imaging (MSTRUGNELL) - on Truro PACS : a massive set of acute abdominal presentations complete with codes showing if the diagnosis was confirmed with pathology/at surgery. ---- ===== Sub-Speciality ===== ==== Neuroradiology ==== * Osbourn's Brain - The gold standard reference text book. Good but massive and expensive. Videos: * [[https://www.youtube.com/@theneuroradiologist|The Neuroradiologist - youtube channel]] * [[https://bsnr.org.uk/education/recordings/|BSNR Webinars]] - if there is one thing I'd recommend it is these lectures, really good quality and comprehensive coverage of neuro without being over long. ==== Head and Neck ==== * [[https://www.learningheadandneck.com/|Learn Head and Neck]] - a website with pages covering head and neck anatomy and case banks covering major on-call presentations. Really good for the basics. * Diagnostic Imaging: Head and Neck - the gold standard reference textbook for head and neck. Good, but massive and expensive. * [[https://nhs.sharepoint.com/:f:/r/sites/msteams_fe8dc7/Shared%20Documents/General/Resources/H%26N%20Pocket%20Guides?csf=1&web=1&e=hGNpn8|H&N Pocket Guides]] - A collection of posters covering a bunch of major head and neck pathology. * [[https://www.youtube.com/@ashnrmember1229|ASHNR Youtube Lectures]] * [[general:H&N_papers|Useful Head and Neck Journal Papers]] general/radiology_resources.txt Last modified: 2024/12/17 11:47by a.wijnberg